“My calling is like Ezekiel and Jeremiah’s,” he says, referring to prophets who acted out messages from God.

But Barrett’s prophetic acts have afforded him a lifestyle of leisure, friends say. For example, he went to Disneyland “as a prophetic act to communicate that the church is living in a fantasy world,” he said. While there, he interceded for the church on Peter Pan, Splash Mountain and various other rides.

He convinced his parents, with whom he still lives, to pay for a cruise to Mexico to indicate that “the church is adrift and must chart a godly course.”

Back home Alan sits around his parents’ house to indicate that the church is uninspired and lazy. He often drinks Starbucks Frappuccinos as a prophetic statement that God has “a sweet future” for the church, if people will repent. He goes to bed early as a prophetic act to say that “Christians are asleep on the job” of winning the lost.

For breakfast he demands that his mother buy him Lucky Charms, so he can warn the church that “many of their sermons are sugar-coated fluff,” he says. He shares his prophetic insights during testimony time at church.

Alan’s father says his son has “an unusually pleasant mission,” and that he should get a job as a prophetic act that the church “must work harder and start paying its own bills.”